My journey from Brooklyn, New York January 4, 2007 to the World Cup Final match July 11, 2010 in South Africa. How will I get there? I have no idea. Join me as I travel around Africa, write a book, make some friends and watch the beautiful game!

Friday, January 18, 2013

On the eve of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations, former Leeds
United and South Africa captain, Lucas Radebe, told a national newspaper about
his fears for the tournament after another low turnout from Premier League players.

The tournament, which kicked off in South Africa on
Saturday, is Africa’s major international football event and is widely
anticipated to be an exciting contest this winter. Yet poor scheduling,
according to Radebe, is keeping top-flight players away from the competition as
they choose to represent their club sides instead.

“The only way to change it is to bring the competition in line with the
European leagues but that is something the organisers don’t want to do,” Radebe
told The Independent.

“But now [players] are suffering because clubs know they will lose them for
more than a month in the middle of the season and can be reluctant to let them
leave.”

Indeed, Radebe is absolutely correct in his assertion that Afcon players
have missed out despite the standard of football in Africa growing to
unprecedented levels. For while African players now litter Europe’s major
leagues the development of international football on the continent is still way
below its potential.

Players cannot or do not want to play in a tournament that cuts into their
season. In 2011, there were 37 internationals from Africa in the Premier
League, yet a year later just 13 attended the Africa Cup of Nations; that is
over half of the 28 that played in 2006, despite six further years of
development.

This year will see 15 Premier League players in the competition plus a good
number of others from around Europe. Yet there is real concern from Premier League betting fans that if players – such as Steven Pienaar of South Africa and Morocco’s Marouane
Chamakh – continue to stay away, then the tournament will fall into neglect
within the next decade.

Afcon organisers have already switched the biannual event to odd years in
order to avoid clashing with World Cups– a decision that should progress to
playing in the summer months if they are to make this tournament available to
all players.